bookbinding material - definitie. Wat is bookbinding material
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Wat (wie) is bookbinding material - definitie

LUXURIOUS BOOK COVER USING METALWORK IN GOLD OR SILVER, JEWELS, OR IVORY, PERHAPS IN ADDITION TO MORE USUAL BOOKBINDING MATERIAL FOR BOOK COVERS SUCH AS LEATHER, VELVET, OR OTHER CLOTH
Jewelled Bookbindings; Jewelled bookbinding; Jeweled bookbinding
  • Typical [[Limoges enamel]] cover, c. 1200
  • Gem-encrusted cover of the [[Codex Aureus of St. Emmeram]], 870
  • Restored 16th-century binding of velvet embroidered with pearls for [[Elizabeth I]], on a volume of church history.
  • Clovis]]

Treasure binding         
A treasure binding or jewelled bookbinding is a luxurious book cover using metalwork in gold or silver, jewels, or ivory, perhaps in addition to more usual bookbinding material for book-covers such as leather, velvet, or other cloth. The actual bookbinding technique is the same as for other medieval books, with the folios, normally of vellum, stitched together and bound to wooden cover boards.
Kelvin–Voigt material         
VISCOELASTIC MATERIAL HAVING THE PROPERTIES BOTH OF ELASTICITY AND VISCOSITY
Kelvin solid; Kelvin material; Kelvin-Voigt Model; Kelvin-Voigt model; Voigt material; Kelvin model; Kelvin-Voigt material; Kelvin–Voigt model
A Kelvin-Voigt material, also called a Voigt material, is the most simple model viscoelastic material showing typical rubbery properties. It is purely elastic on long timescales (slow deformation), but shows additional resistance to fast deformation.
Building material         
  • This wall in [[Beacon Hill, Boston]] shows different types of brickwork and stone foundations.
  • Copper belfry of St. Laurentius church, [[Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler]]
  • Clay blocks (sometimes called clay block brick) being laid with an adhesive rather than mortar
  • Wooden church in [[Bodružal]] in [[Slovakia]].
  • firestop mortar]] at CIBC bank in [[Toronto]].
  • [[Falkirk Wheel]]
  • The [[Gliwice Radio Tower]] (the second tallest wooden structure in the world) in [[Poland]] (2012).
  • pipes]] penetrating a [[concrete]] floor in a Canadian highrise apartment building
  • Sod buildings in Iceland
  • A pile of fired bricks.
  • Toda tribe hut
  • Mohaves]] in a brush hut
  • A wood-framed house under construction in Texas, United States
MATERIAL USED FOR CONSTRUCTION PURPOSES
Building Materials; Building materials; Building products; Building Material; Natural building material; Basic material; Natural building materials; Building supplies; Building stone; Stone architecture; Stone (building material)
Building material is material used for construction. Many naturally occurring substances, such as clay, rocks, sand, wood, and even twigs and leaves, have been used to construct buildings.

Wikipedia

Treasure binding

A treasure binding or jewelled bookbinding is a luxurious book cover using metalwork in gold or silver, jewels, or ivory, perhaps in addition to more usual bookbinding material for book-covers such as leather, velvet, or other cloth. The actual bookbinding technique is the same as for other medieval books, with the folios, normally of vellum, stitched together and bound to wooden cover boards. The metal furnishings of the treasure binding are then fixed, normally by tacks, onto these boards. Treasure bindings appear to have existed from at least Late Antiquity, though there are no surviving examples from so early, and Early Medieval examples are very rare. They were less used by the end of the Middle Ages, but a few continued to be produced in the West even up to the present day, and many more in areas where Eastern Orthodoxy predominated. The bindings were mainly used on grand illuminated manuscripts, especially gospel books designed for the altar and use in church services, rather than study in the library.

The vast majority of these bookbindings were later destroyed as their valuable gold and jewels were removed by looters, or the owners when in need of cash. Others survive without their jewels, and many are either no longer attached to a book, or have been moved to a different book. Some survive in major libraries; for example, the Morgan Library in New York City, the John Rylands Library in Manchester, the British Library in London, the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek in Munich and the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris. As the carved ivory reliefs often used could not usually be recycled, these survive in much larger numbers, giving a better idea of the numbers of treasure bindings that once existed. Other examples are recorded in documentary sources but though the books survive the covers do not. The Book of Kells lost its binding after a robbery, and the fate of the missing cover of the Book of Lindisfarne is not recorded.

In the Eastern Orthodox churches treasure bindings have continued to be produced, mainly for liturgical gospel books, up to the present day, and exist in many artistic styles. Other styles of binding using gems, and typically pearls, have a covering of velvet or other textile, to which the gems are sewn or otherwise fixed. These were more likely to be for the private books of a grand person, especially the prayer books and books of hours of female royalty, and may also include embroidery.